Hi Lynne,
I'm reading Secs 8 and 9, and there are some Notes referred to. I figured I would read the Note (Note F--Par. 83 at the spot where it's cited in the text. All went well, until the note itself referred to another note. That note (Note E -- Par. 69) is several pages long with several more pages of its own footnotes.

I'm not sure how to handle this without causing great confusion for the listener. But I was thinking that I could simply narrate it the way an average reader might:
1. Read Note F--Par. 83 at the spot that it's cited in the text.
2. At the end of Note F, I could read Note E--Par 69, reading the footnotes in the spots where they occur in the main part of the Note.

kierenmetts wrote:Hi Lynne,
I'm reading Secs 8 and 9, and there are some Notes referred to. I figured I would read the Note (Note F--Par. 83 at the spot where it's cited in the text. All went well, until the note itself referred to another note. That note (Note E -- Par. 69) is several pages long with several more pages of its own footnotes.

I'm not sure how to handle this without causing great confusion for the listener. But I was thinking that I could simply narrate it the way an average reader might:
1. Read Note F--Par. 83 at the spot that it's cited in the text.
2. At the end of Note F, I could read Note E--Par 69, reading the footnotes in the spots where they occur in the main part of the Note.

Or.... do you have another reader narrating the Notes? I confused.

Thanks!
Kieren

In general, I leave notes to readers' discretion (I assume your as smart as me, or even smarter ) - but as you ask my opinion...
I'm not a fan of reading footnotes - I think they tend to disrupt the flow and if they were that important, they would be in the body of the text. Where they simply refer you to another page, I don't see the value for an audiobook.
If you decide the notes add something of value and interest, reading how you suggest sounds good, but will make it a much longer section. Please bear in mind any single section cannot be more than about 72 minutes long.

Hi Kieren,
Nice narration. There are a few updates needed.
PL notes:
Section 8-please noise clean it.
Section 9- please noise clean it. Point 102 is missing. It should be at 0.49.
"102.
Morbid phenomena indicate in like manner the existence of organic and physical laws: for if a living being deviates from those rules with reference to which it is constructed, it still seeks to agree with the general vitality of nature in conformity with general laws, and throughout its whole course still proves the constancy of those principles on which the universe has existed, and by which it is held together."
Please update the files and resubmit them.

In the mind, or consciousness of the Earth this flower first lay latent as a dream. Perhaps, in her consciousness, it nested as that which in us corresponds to a little thought.--A.Blackwood